The Dangers of (Mis)Reading: Tolkien, Naming, and Abstraction
How might detaching words and names from their context blind us to the complexity of the stories and truths they once conveyed?
Professor of English
Howard Schaap serves as professor of English at Ƶ, teaching courses such as Advanced Nonfiction Writing, Multicultural American Literature, and Environmental Literature and Ethics.
“Language intensifies life, naming and giving shape to our experience,” says Schaap. “In reading and writing, I'm trying to make ever fuller sense of the world and our place in it—and in teaching writing, I hope to create space for students to do the same.”
His writing often centers on the intersection of place and faith. Recent essays include in Reformed Journal, and “The Place of Imagination in Being Placed” in In All Things. He presented the academic paper, "What We Talk About When We Talk About Faith: Augustinian Spiritual Writing and Meghan O’Gieblyn’s Interior States," at the Midwest Regional Conference on Christianity and Literature at Wheaton College in 2023. His first book, , explores place, history, and faith through stories of farming, fishing, and failure in America’s lost landscape, the tall grass prairie of the Upper Midwest.Outside of the classroom, Schaap is a member of the Academic Senate, mentor to new faculty, and sponsor of the student writing club. In his free time, he enjoys fishing, trying new foods with his wife, Sy, and being a track Dad.
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